Worcester on FAA list of 149 US airport towers to close

Friday

Mar 22, 2013 at 3:10 PMMar 22, 2013 at 3:34 PM

BLOOMBERG NEWS

The U.S. will close 149 air-traffic control towers run by contractors at small- and midsized airports on April 7, including Worcester Regional Airport, as a result of automatic budget cuts at government agencies, a trade group said.

The Federal Aviation Administration spared 24 towers on its original list of 173 subject to closing, the Contract Tower Association, which represents companies running the facilities, said today in an e-mail. All towers being shut down are run by private companies, not the government as at larger facilities.

The FAA's "Contract Tower Closure List" dated March 22 includes five Massachusetts airports: in Beverly, New Bedford, Lawrence, Norwood and Worcester.

Advocates for pilots and airports said shutting the towers will harm safety and impose economic hardship on businesses such as flight schools that rely on controllers to guide planes.

“The White House does not understand the consequences of these actions, or they do and they simply do not care,” Craig Fuller, president and chief executive officer of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, a Frederick, Maryland-based advocacy group, said at a town-hall meeting yesterday at DuPage Airport in West Chicago, Illinois. “Either way, this approach is dangerous and should not stand.”

Spencer Dickerson, executive director of the Alexandria, Virginia-based Contract Tower Association, said it was unfair for the government to shut down more than half the 251 private towers while sparing government-run facilities.

“Controllers at contract towers perform a host of important functions, including separating aircraft, issuing safety and weather alerts, and assisting with military, emergency response, and medical flights,” Dickerson said.

Airports Open

Planes, including airliners, can continue to fly to airports without towers. Most of the roughly 5,000 U.S. public airports don't have towers. Instead of being guided by controllers, pilots radio each other to coordinate landings and takeoffs, according to FAA procedures.

No FAA air-traffic facilities will be shut down for at least a year, Doug Church, spokesman for the National Air Traffic Controllers Association union, said in an e-mailed statement.

The FAA's union contract requires that controllers get at least a year's notice before a facility is closed, Church said. The agency Feb. 22 issued a list of 49 FAA towers that were subject to closing in addition to the private towers.

The FAA's 15,000 controllers will be forced to take one unpaid day off every two weeks starting April 21, which will aggravate delays at some of the busiest U.S. airports, including Chicago O'Hare and Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson, Administrator Michael Huerta told Congress Feb. 27.